Fortress Washington girds for days of anti-Trump protests
WASHINGTON - Washington will turn into a virtual fortress ahead of
Donald Trump's presidential inauguration on Friday, as the U.S. capital
braces for more than a quarter-million protesters expected during the
Republican's swearing-in.
Police
have forecast that some 900,000 people, both supporters and opponents,
will flood Washington for the inauguration ceremony, which includes the
swearing-in on the steps of the U.S. Capitol and a parade to the White
House along streets thronged with onlookers.
Many
of those attending will be protesters irate about the New York real
estate developer's demeaning comments about women, immigrants and
Muslims, a vow to repeal the sweeping healthcare reform law known as
"Obamacare" and plans to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
His
supporters admire Trump's experience in business, including as a real
estate developer and reality television star, and view him as an
outsider and problem-solver.
About
28,000 security personnel, miles (kilometers) of fencing, roadblocks,
street barricades and dump trucks laden with sand will be part of the
security cordon clamped around 3 square miles (almost 8 square km) of
central Washington.
About
30 groups that organizers claim will draw about 270,000 protesters or
Trump backers have received permits for rallies or marches before,
during and after the swearing-in. More protests are expected without
permits.
By far the biggest protest will be the Women's March on Washington on Saturday, which organizers expect to draw 250,000 people.
Hundreds of Women's March-related protests are scheduled across the United States and around the world as well.
An
anti-Trump protest also is scheduled for New York on Thursday evening
when Mayor Bill de Blasio, filmmaker Michael Moore and actors Mark
Ruffalo and Alec Baldwin, who portrays Trump on "Saturday Night Live,"
take part in a rally outside the Trump International Hotel and Tower.
A
major group of protesters, Disrupt J20, has vowed to stage
demonstrations at each of 12 security checkpoints and block access to
the festivities on the grassy National Mall.
One
Washington inaugural protest will come amid a haze of pot smoke as
pro-marijuana protesters show their opposition to Trump's choice for
attorney general, Alabama Republican Senator Jeff Sessions, a critic of
pot legalization.
The
group plans to distribute 4,200 joints at the inauguration and urge
attendees to light up. Possession of small amounts of marijuana is legal
in Washington, but public consumption is not.
Interim
Police Chief Peter Newsham said officers were prepared to carry out
mass arrests, though authorities hoped that would not be necessary.
"If
we do have a mass arrest, we'll be able to get people processed very
quickly," he said in an interview with Washington's NBC 4 television
station.
Police
and security officials have said repeatedly they are committed to
guaranteeing protesters' constitutional rights to free speech and
peaceable assembly.
Friday's
crowds are expected to be less than the 2 million who attended Obama's
first inauguration in 2009, and in line with the million who were at his
second, four years ago.
The
inaugural parade down Pennsylvania Avenue will pass the Trump
International Hotel, a rallying point for protesters since the election
now encircled by security fences.
In
a sign of the Trump-related angst gripping Washington, the dean of the
Washington National Cathedral said this week its choir would sing "God
Bless America" at the inauguration despite misgivings by some members.
"Let
me be clear: We are not singing for the President. We are singing for
God because that is what church choirs do," the Reverend Randolph
Marshall Hollerith said in a letter.
Trump
will attend an interfaith prayer service at the cathedral on Saturday
which will bring to a close the inaugural ceremonies.
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